You know, when you don't want to read anything challenging, just something comfortable and lovely.
Or poetry from other eras as well. Poetry recharges me.
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie
Je suis méchant.
Je suis méchant.
What do you read when your brain wants a break?
- 18/04/2011 11:08:17 AM
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Re: Wodehouse. Gerald Durrell. Pratchett, old favourites. Douglas Adam, ditto.
- 18/04/2011 02:34:35 PM
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Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, Terry Pratchett, The Queen of Attolia *NM*
- 18/04/2011 04:13:07 PM
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The BBC news website. *NM*
- 18/04/2011 06:08:14 PM
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o.O Lovely?
- 18/04/2011 06:27:17 PM
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I was thinking more about the "when your brain wants a break" part.
- 18/04/2011 06:30:22 PM
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Hm... Tolkien, Austen, Trollope of late, Christie, Jordan, Eddings, HP, various comics.
- 18/04/2011 06:31:13 PM
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Pratchett because it's so comfortable, and Matt Reilly because it involves no thinking *NM*
- 18/04/2011 08:17:36 PM
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My answer: Heyer, Butcher, Rankin, Heyer, Eddings, Feist, and Gail Carriger will join the ranks. *NM*
- 18/04/2011 08:20:48 PM
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Romantic poetry
- 18/04/2011 11:20:52 PM
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Childhood faves: Crichton, LM Montgomery, CS Lewis, Little House
- 20/04/2011 04:50:30 AM
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That's a great question. I'm not sure I've given myself a break in quite some time, though. *NM*
- 20/04/2011 09:07:05 AM
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